For Adam
Acknowledgments
A lot of tea, biscuits, angst, and far too many tears went into writing Captive and I couldn’t have done it without the following people:
My UK agent, Jane Finigan, and everyone else at Lutyens and Rubinstein.
My US agent, David Forrer at InkWell Management.
My wonderful editors, Elv Moody and Christian Trimmer. This book is so much better because of them. A huge thank-you also to their brilliant assistants, Rachel Mann and Catherine Laudone, as well as everyone else at S&S for their hard work and belief in me and this book.
My friends, most particularly Natto, Ellie, Fran, Chezzie, Lucie, Tim, and Yusur.
My family, especially my parents (all four of them).
And lastly my husband. Adam, this book is dedicated to you because—like so many of the wonderful things in my life—it wouldn’t exist without you.
January
Paris. The coldest winter in thirty years. The shivering limbs of trees pierce the deadened sky in the Jardin du Luxembourg. Ice clings to the abdomen of the Eiffel Tower. My father’s blood is a vivid stain on the white-laced pavement outside the hotel. In the distance, the sirens scream, but they are too far away.
Dad is already losing consciousness, his eyes rolling back to milky white, his mouth drooping as the bright-red blood spills out across the bright-white snow. All around me people are shouting. Nearby, one of Dad’s bodyguards is yelling into a radio, “Request urgent backup. The prime minister has been shot. Repeat: The prime minister has been shot.”
And someone is screaming.
It is a long time before I realize it is me.
Three months later
CHAPTER ONE
My three-year-old sister, Addy, is playing with her Baby Betty doll on the stairs of Number 10. Her collection of dolls is pushed up against the wooden paneling of the fourteenth step, the one that takes the stairs around the first bend. She shouldn’t be here. She should be up in our flat, getting ready to leave. She is so intent on her game that for a while she doesn’t notice me sit down behind her. When she does look up, her face becomes one big, open smile.
“Byn, cuddle,” she says, sitting down in my lap.
“Why aren’t you dressed yet?” I ask, blowing a raspberry on her baby potbelly. She squeals, slapping me around the head. I let her go and she slides off my lap, taking her doll with her, its head bumping on the step as she reaches for another of her toys: a fluffy giraffe that the Kenyan president’s wife gave her on a state visit last year. A wisp of white-blond hair twists like a curly tail on the nape of my sister’s neck. I tug it gently, watching it straighten and curl, straighten and curl as a voice rises from the hallway below. I shift Addy so I can peer through the banister.
“Thanks for seeing me at such short notice, Stephen. I appreciate it,” a tall man with round wire-framed glasses is saying. It’s Michael Bell, the head of Bell-Barkov and one of Dad’s oldest friends. He is ridiculously dressed as usual, a canary-yellow tie matched with a pale-pink shirt. If looking like a boiled sweet were in this season, Michael would be right on trend.
“Hello, Robyn,” Michael says, looking up and cutting off my train of thought. Addy appears next to me, waving her doll at him through the banister. “How are you, girls?” he asks. “Annabelle was asking after you—”
Dad cuts him short. “I’m due at Westminster shortly, and I’ve got back-to-backs all day. I can only give you five minutes, tops.”
Michael gives a brief wave, and then the two of them disappear from view down one of the corridors.
Shadow, my cat, brushes my arm. He is creeping up the stairs, his eyes on Addy. Addy’s love for Shadow is unconditional and frequently painful, for the cat. She looks up at the wrong moment (for Shadow) and launches herself at him. With a cry of “Hug Kitty,” she squeezes him tight, and the inevitable happens. Shadow lashes out and catches Addy on her cheek. It is a minuscule scratch, but baby howls join cat yowls. Thankfully, Dad and Michael have passed through the interconnecting door into Number 11, so they won’t be disturbed.
I scoop Addy up with one hand and pat Shadow soothingly with the other.
“Kitty scratch! Bad kitty.” She thumps Shadow on the back.
“Hey, hey,” I say, acting as peace ambassador. “Shadow was scared. He didn’t mean to scratch you. You have to be gentle, Ads. Remember, like I showed you.” I scoot back to sit against the wall, with Addy curled in on one side and Shadow on the other. Shadow lets out a resentful purr as I tickle him under the ears. His second purr is calmer as the hair on his haunches settles down.
Addy sniffs again. “Stroke Kitty?” she asks, wiping her eyes.
“Stroke him gently. That’s it.” Addy runs her hand along Shadow’s back, the wrong way, and her tap on his head has more in common with a punch. Shadow looks at me as if to say, Yeah right, and makes a break for it. Addy’s mouth opens again, but before she can form a yell, Mum calls my name from farther down the corridor. She comes out of one of the offices on this floor, dressed in a neat blue knee-length dress and matching two-inch heels. She looks like she’s going to a wedding or a fashion shoot. When the nation’s press camp out on your front door with their long-angle camera lenses, even the school run can feel like the runway at Paris Fashion Week. Ever since a hideous moment last year, at the prince’s christening at Westminster Abbey, when Mum wore a pleated skirt on a windy day and the entire country saw her Spanx, she’s worn tunic dresses, in heavy material, to the knee, which even a tornado couldn’t blow skyward.
Mum keeps out of Dad’s work as much as possible. In politics, her motto is “See no evil, hear no evil.” She thinks you can’t be responsible for what you don’t know. She’s wrong. Dad says the only way to thrive here, in these cramped and fusty old rooms, full of too many files, boxes, aides, press assistants, and researchers, is to either know everything, or to appear to. Ultimately it is not what you know, or even who you know—it’s what people say you know that is important. People think my dad knows everything. Other people’s secrets are his currency.
“Adriana isn’t even dressed, Robyn,” Mum says, as if I’m the nanny. “Where is Karen?” (The actual nanny.) “Come here, Addy, darling.”
I carry my sister up to Mum. Addy cries out for her toys, her legs kicking out. One catches the picture of an ex-prime minister hanging at the top of the stairs, nearly knocking it to the floor. Mum lunges for Addy, and I lunge for the photo. Addy settles as soon as she’s in Mum’s arms, clamping herself to Mum’s body like a baby koala. Mum scoots her onto one hip. “Are you packed? I’d like you to show me which schoolbooks you are planning on bringing with you, Robyn. It’ll be very quiet in Cheshire, and you can make a start on some of the reading you have to do for next term.”
Addy is curved into Mum’s body, head on one side, peering up at me. I make a funny face at her and she does her shy thing, pulling Mum’s long brown hair over her face.
“Are you listening to me?” Mum asks.
“Yes. Schoolbooks. Quiet. Start reading.”
Mum’s face registers hurt, and I feel bad and grumpy in equal measure. “I’ll do some work, but I’m taking my camera as well.”
“If you must—but schoolwork first. I know these last few months have been hard, but you can’t afford to let your grades slip. You’ve got exams coming up.”
I tickle Addy under the chin, making her squeal, and then change the subject. “Will Dad be all right without us?”
“I expect so. It’s only for four days.” Mum’s lips pinch, the way they always do when someone brings up Dad. “Although heaven knows when he’ll ever remember to take his pills. I’ll speak to one of the Garden Room Gi
rls about reminding him.” The Garden Room Girls are the bank of secretaries who work here round the clock, so called because they are based in the room off the garden. Super unoriginal and super sexist. It’s a holdover from years ago. They’re not even all women these days.
“He’ll never get full use of his shoulder back, will he?” I say.
“I think it’s safe to say he won’t be playing tennis again anytime soon. Mind you, after that humiliating performance against the US president at Chequers last year, it’s probably no bad thing.” She stops as she sees my eyes mist with tears that have nothing to do with Dad losing 6–2 to the US president and then hurling his tennis racket at the net. “Oh, Robyn, sweetheart.” She tucks a strand of my hair behind my ear before I can duck out of reach. “We’re safe. No one will hurt you or your father again.”
• • •
People think the British prime minister must live in some really palatial pad, with state-of-the-art everything, but our flat here is actually much smaller than our real home in West Kensington, and the whole thing would probably fit in the ballroom at Groundings, Granny and Grandpa’s estate in Cheshire. Mum says the PM’s flat is dusty and dirty and needs a “jolly good refit,” and she hates not having all our furniture here. Most of it had to go into storage when Dad became PM four years ago. Mum says she can’t remember what half of it looks like now. To which Dad always replies, “How can you miss it, then?”
The garden here is nice, though—an L-shaped stretch of grass and trees. I planted a rose tree when we first moved in. It was from a cutting of one of Granny’s trees. “A little piece of the countryside in that smelly city,” she said. I used to love going out to the garden, even in winter, but since the shooting in January, it seems too exposed. The walls don’t seem high enough, and the windows of Numbers 10, 11, and 12 stare down like lidless eyes on three of its sides. Anyone could be hiding inside them with a gun. Logic and the security services tell me that nothing like that will ever happen again. The man responsible for the shooting has been arrested, and security has been stepped up like crazy over the past three months. Four more police officers at the gates, two extra armed guards patrol the walls, and loads more plainclothes detectives in the surrounding areas, keeping an eye on things. But sometimes your brain doesn’t want to listen to logic. It just wants to have a little freak-out anyway.
I turn away from the window in my room. There’s a mass of stuff on my bed waiting to be packed. T-shirts, jeans, sweaters, thick socks, and rain boots. It’s cold at Granny and Grandpa’s, even in spring. On top of the pile of clothes is the digital SLR camera I got for Christmas. I don’t really know why I got into photography. Actually, I do. His name is Ed Taylor. He’s in the year above me, and he taught me how to use a camera during lunch breaks last year. He taught me a couple of other things too, like the fact that just because you have gorgeous floppy hair, are artistic, and know the exact settings on a digital camera to capture the perfect cityscape at night doesn’t mean you aren’t also a massive jerk. Our fledgling relationship ended when I caught him kissing Cassandra Fulgate at a Christmas party.
Still, he taught me a bit about photography, so not all bad.
Addy’s princess doll is lying on the floor by my bed. I pick her up and put her on the table, bending her legs so she can sit on the edge. She smiles her smug smile at me. This is the kind of daughter the PM should have—a plastic one with neat blond hair and a designer outfit for every occasion. The public thinks they know me because some fashion magazine is able to determine that I buy my clothes from Topshop rather than Prada, and because some person we met once for a few minutes on a crowded beach in Morocco two years ago wrote a piece for the Femail about “The Real Knollys-Greens.” They called me the “shy and thoughtful elder daughter” with a “stubborn streak.” “She knows her own mind,” the author wrote, “and she doesn’t always agree with her father’s policies.” I reckon the latter was because I was reading Animal Farm. It was for a school project, but the journalist wouldn’t know that from the very short conversation she had with me.
I take the shutter off my camera and snap a few shots of the doll, zooming in really tight to her face. There’s a potted plant on my dressing table, and I position it in front of the doll, poking my camera through the leaves to take a couple of “pap shots.” When I first started taking pictures, it amused me to photograph the paparazzi who were snapping photos of us. They did not like it. After one photographer got particularly nasty, Dad suggested I stick to taking photos of inanimate objects like trees and flowers. He said they tend to be “less sensitive.”
The door to my bedroom opens and Dad comes in, a tie in each hand, a magazine tucked under one arm. He looks tired, but then he always does these days, especially after meetings with Michael. “Ah, here you are,” he says. “I need your advice. Red or yellow?”
The red, a near crimson, against his white shirt, is too much like blood on snow. “Yellow,” I say quickly.
“Jolly good.” He drops the red tie and the magazine on my desk chair so he can wrap the yellow one around his neck. His jaw sets in pain as he rotates his shoulder. I wince, and Dad immediately smiles reassuringly. “Just a twinge.”
“Did you take your painkillers this morning?”
“Yes, Nurse Robyn.” He pushes the end of the tie through its knot. “Straight?”
I nod, glancing down at the magazine. Science Today. One of the headlines reads BELL-BARKOV’S LANDMARK KIDNEY DRUG AMABIM-F GIVEN INTERNATIONAL GO-AHEAD.
“Did Michael bring you that?”
“Oh. Yes.” He can see I’m lining up for another question, so he quickly changes the subject. “Are you nearly ready to go? Your mum wants to be there by lunchtime. Gordon informed me that two armed police officers on motorcycles will escort you.”
My heart thumps in my throat. I am worried about traveling down to Cheshire. It’ll be the longest trip I’ve taken since we came back from Paris.
Dad reads my expression. “You’ll be fine, Robyn. You need to be brave, my darling.”
I wish everyone would stop telling me that everything is going to be okay and that I need to trust the security services. The truth is, I’m scared. I can’t stop thinking about what happened in Paris. Dad nearly died that day. I nearly died that day. The world is not safe. I know that now and I can’t unknow it, however much people might tell me to. “You’ll take the car to Whitehall again today, won’t you?” I ask. Before the assassination attempt, Dad used to walk to Parliament. I dread the thought of anything happening to him again. He doesn’t look after himself the way he should. He’s too busy thinking about other things, like running the country.
“Of course. ‘Keep buggering on,’” he says, quoting Winston Churchill. He always quotes other people when he wants to avoid talking about something. Familiar worry lines spring up on his face, and I know I’m right. He’s concerned too, but he’ll never admit it. There’s anxiety in his eyes. They are the exact same shade and color as mine. Everything else about me is my mum’s: long dark hair; pointy chin and freckles; lopsided nose. But my eyes are my dad’s. “Chameleon eyes,” Mum calls them—sometimes green, sometimes brown, and sometimes almost golden. They change with the seasons, and our moods.
“Have you said good-bye to Poppy?” Dad asks, smiling more broadly than the question warrants.
“No,” I snap, irritated that Dad is pretending everything is okay, just like everyone else is. Then I instantly adjust my tone. Dad has enough worries. He doesn’t need me adding to them. “I’m going to see her now.”
“Well, best get a move on. You’ll be leaving in twenty minutes.”
• • •
Number 10 and Number 11, where the chancellor of the exchequer lives with his wife and daughter, Poppy, are joined by interconnecting doors. Poppy is nearly seventeen like me. We didn’t know each other very well before we both moved here four years ago, but we’ve gotten real
ly close since then. She is the only one who gets what it is like to live in this place, protected, guarded, and constantly watched. It’s odd to be so important and yet so utterly ignored. My safety is everyone’s priority, but no one is really interested in me. Unless I do something wrong, of course. Then a lot of people are very interested.
Poppy is reading a book on her bed when I come into her room, her legs propped up. (Someone told her this would prevent varicose veins. I told her she didn’t need to worry about that for at least another fifty years, but Poppy said she didn’t care. Her legs are her best feature, and she intends to keep them that way.) She puts the book down as soon as she sees me.
I take my camera out of my shoulder bag, and Poppy immediately shrieks and covers her face. “Don’t take any photos of me! You always give me a big nose.” She fingers her perfect little button nose.
“It’s a camera, Poppy. It just records what it sees.”
“No. It’s the angles you use. All odd and distorted.”
“Is that the technical term?”
“Shut up. You know what I mean.”
I sit next to her on the bed.
“Are you going to be back for Millie’s party on Saturday?” she asks.
“Probably not. Mum wants to come back late Sunday evening.”
“Ed might be there.”
“Yeah, and so will Cassandra.”
“She’s a cow, isn’t she? I mean, she knew you two were . . . Wait, what were you two doing? I mean, aside from taking pretentious arty photos.”
“Art is my life, Poppy. There is nothing for me beyond that.”
She laughs as I meant her to. “You could get the train back. I’m sure Mum would pick you up from the station. Unless you don’t want to go?”
“I hate those parties. There will be people we don’t know there.”
“Ooh, scary.”
“And they always stare at me, or think it’s hysterical to give me double shots so the PM’s daughter ends up more hammered than anyone else.”
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